Marc Price

Marc Price (born February 23, 1968) is an American actor and comedian, known for his role as Irwin "Skippy" Handelman on the television series Family Ties.[1][2]

Marc Price
Born (1968-02-23) February 23, 1968
OccupationActor, stand-up comedian
Years active1982-present

Life and career

Price is the son of Borscht Belt comedian Al Bernie, and singer Joy Mann.[3]

In addition to playing Skippy on Family Ties, Price starred as Eddie 'Ragman' Weinbauer in the 1986 horror film Trick or Treat. He appeared with Kevin Dillon in the 1988 action-adventure film The Rescue. He then hosted the game show Teen Win, Lose or Draw on The Disney Channel (1989–92). While hosting the game show, Price played the young American tourist calling himself Michael J. Fox in Killer Tomatoes Eat France in 1991 with John Astin, Angela Visser and Steve Lundquist.

As a stand-up comedian, Price drew heavily on his experiences of growing up in Hollywood. He appeared on Last Comic Standing and for over 15 years, was a regular performer at Harrah’s in Las Vegas while simultaneously working as a producer in Hollywood. During the rest of the 2000s onward, he has predominantly acted as writer/producer for cable television networks such as Disney Channel, Food Network, Animal Planet, GSN, Showtime, as well as producing the TBS game show Midnight Money Madness. In September 2013, Price began appearing occasionally on Fox Sports Live with Jay and Dan on Fox Sports.

He is also a member of the Sitcom Legends Tour with Marsha Warfield of Night Court fame and Jimmie Walker from Good Times.

gollark: Some of them can probably also be argued as making more sense back when humans are evolving but are really dumb now.
gollark: Which sometimes sort of make sense as a shortcut for reasoning which also happen to be problematic, but sometimes are just really dumb.
gollark: Wikipedia has a giant "list of cognitive biases" you can look at.
gollark: But said money could *probably* be used more effectively than playing the lottery.
gollark: I don't assume that, that would be weird.

References

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